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BIOL 311 Human Genetics Fall 2006 Lecture: Molecular Pathology Reading: Chapter 16 Lecture outline: 1. Molecular approaches to disease 2. Loss of function mutations 3. Gain of function mutations 4. Examples of mutations causing human diseases 5. Triplet expansion diseases Lecture: 1. Molecular approaches to disease Pathology: the study of disease. Molecular pathology: finding the underlying genetic or biochemical basis for the disease Genetic variation that leads to disease not always easy to distinguish from random genetic change (polymorphism). 2. Loss of function mutations Mutant DNA defective RNA protein with reduced function or no function Types of mutations leading to loss of function Small insertions or deletions--shift reading frame "frameshift mutants" Nonsense mutations Nucleotide changes that result in premature stop codons mRNAs with premature stop codons are usually degraded Splicing mutations Alteration of splice junctions or "branch points" Alter regulatory elements that regulate splicing (splicing enhancers or silencers) Usually loss of function mutations are recessive, however some show incomplete dominance or "haploinsufficiency"--where one good copy is not sufficient to restore function. Dominant negative effect--when a mutant polypeptide loses function and interferes with product of the normal allele. Seen in proteins that form dimers and multimers, i.e. collagen, transcription factors. 3. Gain of function mutation 1 Gene product does something positively abnormal Usually requires a specific change; other mutations in the same gene give a different phenotype. Single types of mutation leading to disease can be due to Specific mechanism of change, i.e. triplet expansion. Founder effect--a deleterious mutation in a small population is source of major type of mutation Heterozygote selection Gain of function common in genes involved in cancer. Gain of function mutations activating cell signaling pathways often produce dominant phenotypes. Can have gain of function and loss of function mutations in same gene leading to different diseases. 4. Examples of molecular bases for diseases a. Hemoglobinopathies: diseases of hemoglobins Single nt substitution at amino acid #6 of beta-globin causes sickle cell anemia. Thalessemias Not enough alpha or beta globin chains, leads to anemias α0 thalessemia: no alpha globin α+ thalessemia: reduced levels of alpha globin Fig. 16-3 deletions in globin genes due to unequal crossover Table 16-1 lists 11 ways to reduce or abolish production of functioning gene product. 5. Triplet expansion diseases discovered as disease mechanism in 1991 show anticipation--age of onset is lower and severity is worse in subsequent generations. At least eight diseases show triplet expansion Two classes of triplet expansions that cause disease (5'UTR, intron, 3'UTR) Large expansions of repeats outside coding sequences Fragile X syndrome Mental retardation syndrome (CGG)n repeat in 5'UTR stable @ 6-54 copies unstable @ 200-1000+ copies 2 Other diseases: Friedreich Ataxia Myotonic dystrophy (2 genes) Spinocerebellar ataxia (2 genes) Modest expansion of CAG repeats within coding sequences encoding polyglutamine. Late onset neurodegenerative disorders, all but one dominantly inherited Huntington Disease (CAG)n Stable # repeats 6-35 Unstable # repeats 36-100+ Polyglutamine diseases, Alzheimers, Parkinsons have in common protein aggregation. 3